Should
in sentence
40487 examples of Should in a sentence
This made it possible for US households to stop saving and enjoy an exorbitant consumption level, but it stood on its head the conventional wisdom that capital
should
flow from rich to poor countries, where it can more productively be invested.
But regulators and fintech firms
should
take note of examples like Alipay to develop rational strategic possibilities for this emerging sector.
Most important, they
should
remember that access to finance is not an end in itself, but a means to improve one’s lot.
Dictators in the DockNEW YORK: Britain's law lords will begin to decide this week (after botching the first attempt) whether General Augusto Pinochet
should
continue to be detained for possible extradition to Spain.
Similarly, we
should
not submit to those who have terrorized nations.
Here is a difficulty illustrated by the recent surrender in Cambodia of two Khmer Rouge leaders, Khieu Samphan and Nuon Chea, who claim that their crimes
should
be forgotten, that "bygones
should
be bygones."
Every entrepreneur
should
be entitled to raise funding from willing investors.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) proposed in December that each of America’s 50 states
should
establish a disaster insurance fund to cover a wide range of big calamities.
After all, bets on leadership, vision, and earnings potential
should
not be limited to investments in California-based technology start-ups.
Investors
should
take note.
Russia’s concerns about Western institutions’ post-Cold War eastward expansion
should
be considered, even if they are not necessarily accommodated.
NATO
should
state explicitly that Ukraine will not become a member, while the EU
should
keep open the possibility of membership for Ukraine as an incentive for domestic reform.
Ukraine’s Western partners
should
also push for informal, direct contacts between Ukraine’s government and the diverse actors in eastern Ukraine currently labeled as “separatist.”
At the same time, the West
should
rally stronger economic support for Ukraine and its anti-corruption reforms, while ensuring that aid and trade go to areas controlled by “separatist” forces, too.
None of this is to say that the West
should
exclude the provision of military training and supplies; but it must do so prudently and to support a political process.
What NATO can and
should
do – in a transparent manner – is scale up defensive military support for its members close to Russia.
For now, sanctions against Russia
should
be maintained until peace gains traction.
If Russia does not reverse course, emphasis
should
be placed on so-called smart sanctions that target individuals and specific entities, not the Russian people.
If the Ukraine situation can finally be demilitarized, and Russia has shown convincing evidence of readiness to address its grievances by political means, the West
should
offer Russia meaningful re-engagement.
This could occur through frameworks like the World Trade Organization, the G-8, and especially the pan-continental Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which
should
be revitalized.
Russia
should
not dismiss the opportunity to reach a compromise with the West.
The Kremlin
should
view the situation in eastern Ukraine – another unstable, militia-run territory that has already sent a flood of refugees into western Russia – as a similar threat.
China and other powers
should
be persuaded to support cooperative security arrangements and help Russia and Western countries de-escalate the crisis.
Being removed from the US, they
should
be highly sensitive to any whiff of information that their money may not be safe there.
Early on, there were intimations that Singh
should
neither be underestimated as a political manipulator, nor overestimated as an effective economic manager.
A scenario in which Merkel finishes out her term, staying on for another three years,
should
therefore not be ruled out.
All of these advances ostensibly
should
have boosted productivity; and yet, in the United States, a world leader in technological innovation, business-sector labor productivity growth in 2004-2014 averaged less than half the rate of the previous decade.
Meanwhile, the northern EU countries are falling prey to a simplistic message of their own: that their southern counterparts are irresponsible spendthrifts who
should
be left to solve their own problems.
It drives participants into opposite corners, setting them up for conflict – an outcome that
should
be avoided at all costs.
The EU
should
commit to continue democratizing its institutions, as it did when it gave the democratically elected European Parliament a voice in the selection of the European Commission president.
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